Recently Yahoo News on-line picked up the following:
A plague mysteriously spread from Europe into Asia 4,000
years ago. Scientists now think they may know how
CNN - Taylor Nicioli
Tue, August 12, 2025 at 2:25 p.m. PDT
During the Bronze Age, however, the plague bacterium, Yersinia pestis, had not yet developed the genetic tool kit that would allow later strains to be spread by fleas. Scientists have been baffled as to how the illness could have persisted at that time.
“Yersinia pestis is a zoonotic disease (transmitted between humans and animals) that emerged during prehistory, but so far the way that we have studied it using ancient DNA has been completely from human remains, which left us with a lot of questions and few answers about how humans were getting infected,” said lead author Ian Light-Maka, a doctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology in Berlin. There have been nearly 200 Y. pestis genomes recovered from ancient humans, the researchers wrote.
Finding the ancient bacterium in an animal not only helps researchers understand how the bacterial lineage evolved, but it could also have implications for understanding modern diseases, Light-Maka added via email. “Evolution can sometimes be ‘lazy,’ finding the same type of solution independently for a similar problem — the genetic tools that worked for pestis to thrive for over 2000 years across over Eurasia might be reused again.”
Unraveling the mystery of a Bronze Age plague
The ancient
bacterium that caused the Eurasia plague, known today as the Late Neolithic
Bronze Age lineage, spread from Europe all the way to Mongolia, with evidence
of the disease found across 6,000 kilometers (3,700 miles).
To find the ancient plague genome, the study authors investigated Bronze Age animal remains from an archaeological site in Russia known as Arkaim. The settlement was once associated with a culture called Sintashta-Petrovka, known for its innovations in livestock. There, the researchers discovered the missing connection — the tooth of a 4,000-year-old sheep that was infected with the same plague bacteria found in humans from that area.
“We’re sort of unveiling this in real time and trying to get a sense for how Bronze Age nomadic herders out in the Eurasian Steppe were setting the stage for disease transmission that potentially led to impacts elsewhere,” Hermes said, “not only in later in time, but also in a much more distant, distant landscape.”
During this time within the Eurasian Steppe, as many as 20% of the bodies in some cemeteries are those of people who were infected with, and most likely died from, the plague, making it an extremely pervasive disease, Hermes said. While livestock are seemingly a part of what made the disease so widespread, they are only one piece of the puzzle. The identification of the bacterial lineage in an animal opens new avenues for researching this disease’s evolution as well as the later lineage that caused the Black Death in Europe and the plague that’s still around today, he added.
“It’s not surprising, but it is VERY cool to see (the DNA) isolated from an ancient animal. It’s extremely difficult to find it in humans and even more so in animal remains, so this is really interesting and significant,” Hendrik Poinar, evolutionary geneticist and director of the Ancient DNA Centre at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, wrote in an email. Poinar was not involved with the study.
It is likely that humans and animals were passing the strains back and forth, but it isn’t clear how they did so — or how sheep were infected in the first place. It is possible sheep picked up the bacteria through a food or water source and then transmitted the disease to humans via the animal’s contaminated meat, he added.
“I think it shows how extremely successful (if you want to label it that way) this particular pathogen has been,” Poinar added. He, as well as the study’s authors, said they hope that further research uncovers other animals infected with the ancient strain to further the understanding of the disease’s spread and evolution.
Ancient plague to modern plague
There is no need for alarm when it comes to dealing with livestock and pets, Hermes said. The findings are a reminder that animals carry diseases that are transmittable to humans. Be cautious when cooking meat, or to take care when bitten by an animal, he added.
“The takeaway is that humans aren’t alone in disease, and this has been true for thousands of years. The ways we are drastically changing our environment and how wild and domesticated animals are connected to us have the potential to change how disease can come into our communities,” Light-Maka said. “And if you see a dead prairie dog, maybe don’t go and touch it.”
Translation
4000年前,一場瘟疫神祕地從歐洲蔓延到亞洲。如今,科學家認為他們或許找到了背後的原因
數千年來,一種疾病一再襲擊古代歐亞大陸,並迅速廣泛傳播。寄生在老鼠身上的受感染跳蚤的叮咬將這種瘟疫以其最臭名昭著的形式 - 14世紀的黑死病 - 傳染給了人類,這至今這仍是最常見的傳播方式。
然而,在青銅時代,鼠疫菌 - 耶爾森氏菌 (Yersinia pestis)在遺傳方面, 尚未形成其可透過跳蚤去傳播它的後期菌株的技能。科學家一直對這種疾病在當時如何持續存在感到困惑。
如今,一個國際研究小組從非人類宿主 - 一隻生活在約4000年前,現今俄羅斯境內的青銅時代家養羊體內提取了首個古代鼠疫耶爾森氏菌基因組。這項發現使科學家們能夠更了解這種疾病在古代的傳播和生態環境,並由此認為牲畜在其遍布歐亞大陸的傳播中發揮了作用。這項研究結果於週一發表在《細胞》雜誌上。
該研究的主要作者、柏林 Max Planck 感染生物學研究所的博士研究員 Ian Light-Maka 研究所的博士研究員說: 「鼠疫耶爾森氏菌是一種史前時期出現的人畜共患疾病(在人與動物之間傳播),但迄今為止,我們利用古代DNA對其進行研究的方式完全依賴於人類遺骸,這給我們留下了許多關於人類如何被感染的疑問,卻鮮有答案」。研究人員寫道,目前已從古人類體內提取了近200個鼠疫耶爾森氏菌基因組。
Light-Maka 透過電子郵件補充道,在動物體內發現這種古老的細菌不僅有助於研究人員了解細菌譜系的演化過程,還可能對理解現代疾病產生重要意義。 “進化有時很 ‘懶惰’,針對類似的問題, 它會獨立地找到同類型的解決方案 - 導致鼠疫桿菌在歐亞大陸繁衍生息超過2,000年的遺傳基因技術可能會再次被重複利用。”
揭開青銅時代瘟疫之謎
導致歐亞大陸瘟疫的古老細菌,如今被稱為新石器時代晚期青銅時代傳承譜系,從歐洲一路傳播到蒙古,在6,000公里(3,700英里)的範圍內都發現了這種疾病的證據。
根據德國研究機構發佈的新聞稿,最近的證據表明,出現在過去1萬年內的大多數現代人類疾病,與牲畜和寵物等動物的馴化同時發生。科學家懷疑,除了囓齒動物 (rodents),其他動物也是青銅時代瘟疫傳播這一巨大謎團的一部分,但由於缺乏從動物宿主體內提取的細菌基因組,因此尚不清楚具體是哪些動物。
為了找到古代瘟疫基因組,研究人員研究了來自俄羅斯 Arkaim 古遺址的青銅時代動物遺骸。該定居點曾與一個名為 Sintashta-Petrovka 的文化族群聯繫在一起,該文化以其畜牧業的創新而聞名。在那裡,研究人員發現了缺失的環節 - 一顆4,000年前的綿羊的牙齒,它感染了與該地區人類相同的瘟疫細菌。
這項研究的共同作者、阿肯色大學人類學助理教授 Taylor Hermes 博士表示,發現受感染的牲畜表明,家養綿羊充當了人類與受感染野生動物之間的橋樑。
Hermes 說: “我們正在實時揭示這一現象,並試圖了解青銅時代歐亞草原的游牧民是如何為疾病傳播奠定基礎的,這種傳播可能對其他地方造成影響”; “它不僅影響到後來的時代,也影響到更遙遠、更遙遠的地方。”
Hermes 說,在這段時期,歐亞草原的一些墓地中多達20%的屍體是有感染鼠疫的人,而且很可能死於鼠疫,這使得鼠疫成為一種極為普遍的疾病。雖然牲畜似乎是導致這種疾病如此廣泛傳播的原因之一,但它們只是謎團中的一塊拼圖。他補充說,在動物體內鑑定出細菌譜系,為研究這種疾病的進化, 以及導致歐洲黑死病, 和至今仍在蔓延的瘟疫的後期譜系開闢了新的途徑。
進化遺傳學家、安大略省漢密爾頓市 McMaster大學古代DNA中心主任 Hendrik Poinar 在一封電子郵件中寫道: 「這並不奇怪,但看到從古代動物身上分離出的DNA真的非常酷。在人類身上找到這種DNA極其困難,在動物遺骸中就更難了,所以這真的很有趣,意義重大」。Poinar並沒有參與這項研究。
人類和動物之間很可能互相傳遞了這些菌株,但目前尚不清楚是怎樣做成的, 或者說綿羊最初是如何被感染的。他補充說,綿羊有可能透過食物或水源感染了這種細菌,然後透過受感染的羊肉將疾病傳播給人類。
Poinar補充道: 「我認為這表明這種特殊病原體(如果你想這樣稱呼它的話)是多麼成功的」。他和研究的作者表示,他們希望進一步的研究能發現其他被這種古老菌株感染的動物,以進一步了解這種疾病的傳播和演化。
從古代瘟疫到現代瘟疫
雖然青銅時代存在的鼠疫譜系已經滅絕,但鼠疫耶爾森氏菌仍存在於非洲和亞洲部分地區以及美國西部、巴西和秘魯。但這種細菌很少見,全球每年只有1,000 到 2,000 鼠疫病例。
Hermes 表示,在處理牲畜和寵物時無需驚慌。這些發現提醒我們動物可以把疾病傳播給人類。他補充道烹調肉類時要小心,被動物咬傷時也要小心。
Light-Maka 說: 「關鍵在於,人類並非唯一患病的人,幾千年來一直如此。我們正在徹底改變環境的方式,我們與野生動物和家養動物與之間是如何相連,這些都可能改變疾病進入我們社區的方法」;「如果你看到一隻死去的草原犬鼠,最好不要去碰它」。
So, for thousands of years Black Death spread out by fleas had repeatedly struck ancient Eurasia. During the Bronze Age, however, Yersinia pestis had not
yet developed the genetic tool kit that would allow later strains to be spread
by fleas. Scientists have been baffled as to how the illness could have
persisted at that time. Now, an international team of researchers has recovered
the first ancient Yersinia pestis genome from a Bronze Age domesticated sheep
that lived around 4,000 years ago. The discovery is leading scientists to
believe that livestock has played a role in its spread throughout Eurasia.
Apparently, the identification of the bacterial lineage in an animal has open
new avenues for researching this disease’s evolution as well as the later
lineage that caused the Black Death.
Note:
1. Yersinia pestis (Y. pestis) (耶爾森氏菌)is
a gram-negative, non-motile, coccobacillus bacterium without spores. It is
related to pathogens Yersinia enterocolitica, and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis,
from which it evolved. Yersinia pestis is responsible for the disease plague,
which caused the Plague of Justinian and the Black Death, one of the deadliest
pandemics in recorded history. (Wikipedia)
2. Rodents (囓齒動物) refers
to a diverse order of mammals characterized by two large incisors in the upper
and lower jaws that continuously grow throughout their lives. They are commonly
found in various habitats and are known for their ability to adapt to different
environments.